When you are in a turn and rear have lost grip ( too much slip angle) if I put more power on the the rear tires (rwd car)
Will the slip angle increase? Can power increase the slip angle?
Yeah but does that change the slip Angle? Does what slip you have change your longitional grip? (how much power you can put down)Jersey Tom wrote:Is this baslically asking.. if you slip 't have much rear grip on a RWD car and mash thpower youle, will you spin out? Sure.
If you have exceeded the point where the slip angle is at it's maximum, then it drops off quite rapidly. Basically, the back end is coming around. The usual correction is to lift the throttle, turn into the spin, and pray that you can collect it back. But if you apply power, woopsie dooo.Erunanethiel wrote:When you are in a turn and rear have lost grip ( too much slip angle) if I put more power on the the rear tires (rwd car)
Will the slip angle increase? Can power increase the slip angle?
So I should change my question ( because I think I found a sitiuation to answer my question perfectly).DaveKillens wrote:If you have exceeded the point where the slip angle is at it's maximum, then it drops off quite rapidly. Basically, the back end is coming around. The usual correction is to lift the throttle, turn into the spin, and pray that you can collect it back. But if you apply power, woopsie dooo.Erunanethiel wrote:When you are in a turn and rear have lost grip ( too much slip angle) if I put more power on the the rear tires (rwd car)
Will the slip angle increase? Can power increase the slip angle?
Power does not increase the slip angle, that is determined by the tires, the lateral load, and grip available. In rally cars and the domestic sedan, the tire slip angle is wide and generous. But in a Formula One tire, because they are designed for incredible grip on asphalt, the slip angle is incredibly fine, less than 6 degrees. Once past that point, they fall off the cliff.
http://www.f1technical.net/forum/viewto ... f=1&t=5967
How about like if I am over the slip angle which the tire gives its top lateral performance, is it now easier for me to spin the tires more even tho I dont have much power? I can keep the car sliding all day long, once I started it through weight shift?Lycoming wrote:The more lateral force you're getting from the tire contact patch, the less longitudinal force you will be able to get out of it. But forward acceleration will transfer more weight onto the rear wheels, which will allow you to generate more longitudinal and lateral force. Whether or not that results in you spinning out requires more details.
Oh yeah I drift everywhereDaveKillens wrote:It sounds like you're thinking of drifting. I really hope you don't try that on the street.
how could there not be ?Erunanethiel wrote:So lets stay on the subject.
Is there a correlation between slip angle (lateral grip) and slip ratio (longitudional grip)?